Dictionary Definition
warmonger n : a person who advocates war or
warlike policies [syn: militarist]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Noun
- someone who advocates war; a militarist
Translations
one who advocates war
- Catalan: bel·licista, militarista
- Czech: válečný štváč
- Russian: поджигатель войны
- Spanish: belicista, militarista
- Swedish: krigshetsare
Synonyms
Extensive Definition
Warmonger
is a BBC
Books original novel written by Terrance
Dicks and based on the long-running British
science fiction television series Doctor Who. It
features the Fifth Doctor
and Peri.
It is a prequel to the television serial The
Brain of Morbius from Morbius and Solon and the Sisterhood of
the Flame's perspective, although it occurs later in the Doctor's
timeline. Cardinal Borusa also
appears.
Plot
The Doctor and Peri arrive on a small planet, but
as soon as Peri steps out, she is attacked by a wild animal and her
arm is almost severed. The Doctor takes her in the TARDIS to the
hospice on the planet Karn to see the best surgeon in the galaxy,
Doctor Mehendri Solon. When they arrive, the hospice’s advisor,
the Reverend Mother Maren (of the Sisterhood of the Flame)
convinces Solon to reattach Peri's arm, which he does
successfully.
The head of security, Commander Aylmer Hawken
tries to stop the Doctor leaving, but Maren convinces him not to,
as she is wary of Time Lords.
Lord Delmar, the owner of the hospice also warns Hawken against
interfering with The Doctor, in case it stops the peace conference
which the hospice is hosting from proceeding. The conference is to
make alliances between the smaller empires, and has been set up by
a warlord known as "The General".
Solon’s assistant Drago starts harassing Peri,
and after The Doctor complains, Drago later suggests to Solon that
Peri and The Doctor be killed, but Solon dismisses his worries and
goes to work on "project Z". overhearing this, Peri follows Drago
to a room full of dead bodies made from parts of different species.
She leaves the room, but Solon notices Peri's interference and
injects her with a poison, but tells The Doctor that her body is
rejecting the arm, and she needs the Sisterhood's elixir of life.
The Doctor fetches it, but Solon secretly keeps it and gives Peri
the antidote. The Doctor then threatens to reveal what Solon just
did to Lord Delmar and takes Peri out of the room.
When the ambassadors arrive for the peace
conference, Lord Delmar invites the Doctor to watch, but as the
Doctor is about to refuse, he recognises the General's mind as that
of a Time Lord, and decides to bug the room. Listening in on the
meeting, they discover that The General is gathering the small
empires into a huge army to take over the galaxy. After his plan to
steal the elixir of life fails, the General reveals himself to be
Morbius and kidnaps Peri.
Peri escapes Morbius's ship by pretending to have
an infectious skin disease, and she is put in an escape pod and
launched into space, but a ship from the planet Sylvana finds her
and takes her back to Sylvana. Sylvana's nearest planet Freedonia
joins Morbius and attacks Sylvana and invades it, causing Peri to
join a group of guerrillas.
While Solon continues his experiments, the Doctor
goes to Gallifrey to warn
the Time Lords about Morbius. The Time Lord President Saran and
Borusa refuse to become directly involved, but order the Doctor to
unite the largest empires in the galaxy into one army to defeat
Morbius. The Doctor then manages to persuade a number of Draconians
and Sontarans to join
his army. The Time lords send him Ensign Vidal, a Gallifreyan, to
act as his advisor, a flagship and the title of Supreme Coordinator
of the Alliance. As the campaign grows, Ogrons, Ice Warriors
and Cybermen join the
Doctor's forces. After Sylvana is recaptured, Peri is reunited with
the Doctor.
Eventually Morbius begins defending the area
around Karn, which is where The Doctor plans to defeat him finally.
The Doctor leads his army into a ground battle, but Maren initially
refuses help in defending the elixir of life but eventually
accepts. Morbius then withdraws all his troops from the planets
they are protecting and brings them to Karn. After the Doctor's
forces are nearly destroyed, a second army arrives, comprised of
foot soldiers from the planets that the Doctor liberated from
Morbius. Morbius's army is destroyed, he is captured, tried and
sentenced to death. The survivors of the Doctor's army return to
their home planets while Morbius is imprisoned awaiting
execution.
Solon unleashes his zombies on Saran and Borusa,
but they easily overpower them, and Solon is imprisoned. To avoid a
paradox, the Doctor goes to free Solon from his cell, but finds one
of Morbius's commanders has already done so, following them to the
execution room, he finds Solon removing Morbius's brain. After
Solon leaves, the Doctor puts Morbius's body in the vaporisation
chamber, and waits for Saran and Borusa to arrive. They then
vaporise Morbius's body. The Doctor quietly leaves with Peri. The
hospice is abandoned, the Sisterhood retreat to their temple and
Solon resumes his experiments until, years later, the Fourth
Doctor and Sarah Jane
Smith arrive
on Karn.
Notes
- Peri quotes from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. Adams was script editor on Doctor Who in 1979 and wrote three stories for the programme, The Pirate Planet, City of Death and the uncompleted Shada.